Estimate total fuel cost by rounding distance and rate to easy numbers before multiplying.
Before multiplying, round both quantities to convenient numbers to make planning easier and results clearer.
Estimation helps when planning trips or managing expenses. Instead of multiplying exact decimals, rounding both numbers gives a quick and reliable total. In this example, multiplication represents estimating the fuel cost for a long journey.
A driver travels 64.6 miles and their car uses roughly £12.80 of fuel for every 10 miles. To estimate the total cost, round 64.6 to 60 and 12.8 to 10. Multiply: 60 × 10 = £600. The real total is a bit higher (£64.6 × £12.8 ≈ £826), but the estimate gives a clear, simple figure for quick planning.
Drivers and logistics planners estimate before checking precise numbers to:
GCSE estimation skills mirror these real-world habits — you’re learning mental maths that actually saves time and money.
Even if an estimate isn’t exact, it should reveal the general size of the answer. In this question, 600 tells you the cost is in the hundreds — not tens or thousands. This sense of scale is crucial for accuracy checking in GCSE exams.
Estimation isn’t just about maths; it’s about decision-making. Car mechanics estimate repair costs, delivery drivers estimate times, and event organisers estimate expenses. Quick estimates make planning faster and prevent surprises later.
When rounding two numbers for estimation, aim for ‘friendly’ pairs that keep mental multiplication easy — like 60 and 10 here. Practise this habit regularly for faster reasoning in non-calculator GCSE questions.
Rounding 64.6 to 60 and 12.8 to 10 makes estimation quick and clear: 60 × 10 = 600. This approach simplifies planning fuel costs, shopping totals, or any real-life multiplication task.